A trio of women who have accused Bill Clinton of sexual misconduct detailed Monday what they say happened years ago – and why they held back from going to the police or going public at the time.

'I was still in a state of shock and felt like it was my fault. I felt like it was my fault and I just had to accept it for letting him come to my room,' said Juanita Broaddrick, who came forward in 1999 with accusation that Clinton raped her in an Arkansas hotel room two decades earlier.

'That was just how we felt back then,' she told Sean Hannity's podcast Monday night.

Broaddrick retold her story of a decades-old encounter with Clinton in his hotel room, a day after Donald Trump's campaign released a new web ad that uses her accusations, and after the candidate himself mentioned the word 'rape' to describe what happened then in an appearance on Hannity's show television show on Fox News.

'I felt like it was my fault,' Broaddrick said on Sean Hannity's radio show

Bill Clinton visited Braoddrick's nursing home in Van Buren Arkansas

Paula Jones filed the sexual harassment lawsuit against Bill Clinton had ultimately helped spur his impeachment while former White House volunteer Kathleen Willey accused Clinton of groping her

Kathleen Willey was a fundraiser who lived in Virginia and knew Clinton personally

'It's hard for me to say the word "rape". I always usually say "sexual assault" but rape is the perfect terminology for what happened,' Broaddrick explained.

Broaddrick, who was attending a nursing conference at the time of the alleged incident, said she agreed to meet Clinton for coffee in his hotel room despite some misgivings.

'I felt apprehensive, but he was the [state] attorney general,' she said. 'I believed him. I believed it would not have been good to meet down in the coffee shop. I even ordered coffee to the room.'

She repeated her story that Clinton then forcibly had sex with her and bit her lip to the point of making it bleed.

When it was over, 'He calmly walks to the door and puts on his sunglasses and turns and says you better put some ice on that. I was shocked,' she said.

Broaddrick described how she later attended an event attended by Bill and Hillary Clinton, a fact that has been used to undermine her story.

She said she wanted to leave the event but Hillary Clinton approached her and delivered what Broaddrick perceived as a threat. 'She pulled me back into her and said very low, she said do you understand everything you do? And it frightened me, to say the least.'

Hannity had three Clinton accusers on the same program, as the Clinton scandals of the 90s come roaring back, fueled by constant mentions and attacks by Trump on the campaign trail. Paula Jones and Kathleen Willey each told their stories, which made headlines during Clinton's presidency and campaigns.

Hannity said he knew all three women and had interviewed them previously.

'Ooh. Now I need to take a shower,' said Hannity, in one of several moments of levity despite the serious nature of the accusations.

After Clinton's security invited her up to the then-governor's suite, Jones explained: 'I was very reluctant. We're like oh maybe he wants to … gets us a job or something,' she explained, having been a young state employee at the time.

'It never crossed my mind that I was going to go up here and he would do that. Ever,' she said.

Jones sued Clinton for sexual harassment, charging that he lured her to his room in the Excelsior hotel, tried to kiss her and dropped his pants in an attempt to get oral sex.

Then in an odd twist, Jones left the program in the middle of the interview to answer the door.

'Oh you know what. Can you all just hang on? I have a sheriff guy at my house,' she said. 'I'm sorry. Can you all go to somebody else? I've got to got the door I'm sorry.'

'This is live radio, folks,' Hannity explained, before turning to Willey's story.

Hannity told the three women on his show: 'I've known you all for years. You've all become friends of mine. I have respect for all of you.'

He said he believed them 'a hundred thousand percent.'

Willey, a White House volunteer who had helped raise funds for Clinton, sought a White House meeting with Clinton in 1993 after she got in financial trouble as her husband faced possible jail time.

'We were in serious financial trouble. We had one in college and one on the way to medical school and a nice life,' she said.

'I'm going to go to the president and tell him that I need a job,' she decided.

Willey ended up in the Oval Office with Clinton, and says the two talked in a kitchenette area – the same area where trysts with Monica Lewinsky were said to have occurred.

Willey says she came to Clinton for help getting a government job

'The next thing I knew he had me back into a corner, all over me, whispering in my ear. I didn't know what to do. It was just like Paula and Juanita's. You don't know what to do. And I'm thinking to myself, what in the world is he doing?'

'His hand's up my skirt. He put my hand on his crotch. He had his hands on my breasts. His hands were all over me, whispering in my ear tha, 'I've been wanting to do this first time I met you,'' she said.

'I remember saying to him, 'Aren't you afraid somebody's gonna walk in here like Hillary or anybody. And he said, 'No, I know where everybody is all the time.''

Bill Clinton reached an $850,000 settlement with Jones in 1998, ending a lawsuit that culminated in his impeachment trial in Congress. Clinton admitted no wrongdoing.

Clinton 'emphatically denied' Willey's accusation in a 1998 deposition. The Independent Counsel's report on President Clinton found that Willey had made false statements during her deposition in Jones' lawsuit and also made false statements to the FBI about her sexual relationship wtih a former boyfriend.

'Trump is doing what he does best, attacking when he feels wounded and dragging the American people through the mud for his own gain.'

The old allegations about her husband reemerged after Hillary Clinton said December 3 in New Hampshire that, ''Every survivor of sexual assault deserves to be heard, believed, and supported.'

Broaddrick told WRKO in Boston on Tuesday: ''It's important for everyone to know that Hillary Clinton is not innocent in all of the cover up and the attempted attacks on all of the women that Bill Clinton abused.'

'It's simply outrageous for Andrea Mitchell to spew such a lie,' Broaddrick said. 'Nothing has changed from the detailed investigation that NBC did into my story in [1999] before airing it. And now, if NBC thinks my experience has been discredited, why did Andrea Mitchell call me and ask me for new information about my encounter with Hillary?' she said.

FBI agents who investigated Broaddrick's accusations on behalf of the Independent Counsel's office found the evidence 'inconclusive.'